Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
IRIS
GALLERY
Shebehon Forest
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Avenue of Oaks
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Bufflesdrift Baobab
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Rilkes Bayon
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Diksom Forest
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
General Sherman
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Croft Chestnut 1
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
The Lovers
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Bristlecone Pine
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Rooted Passage
Platinum Print
Two Sizes Available
Paper Size 22 x 30 or 30 x 40
signed, Beth Moon
Portraits of Time
Many of the trees I have photographed have survived because they are out of reach of civilization; on
mountainsides, private estates, or on protected land. Certain species exist only in a few isolated areas of the world.
The criteria I use for choosing particular trees are basically three: age, immense size or notable history. I research
the locations by a number of methods; history books, botanical books, tree registers, newspaper articles and
information from friends and travelers.
Standing as the earths largest and oldest living monuments, I believe these symbolic trees will take on a
greater significance, especially at a time when our focus is directed at finding better ways to live with the
environment, celebrating the wonders of nature that have survived throughout the centuries. By feeling a larger
sense of time, developing a relationship with the natural world, we carry that awareness with us as it becomes a
part of who we are. I cannot imagine a better way to commemorate the lives of the worlds most dramatic trees,
many which are in danger of destruction, than by exhibiting their portraits. Beth Moon